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Kenya raps U.S. over 'unfriendly' travel warning after attack

Reuters

Sunday, September 29, 2013
9:48:41 CST AM

Police officers walk past the Westgate mall in Nairobi on September 28, 2013 where forensic experts are still collecting evidence after a deadly four-day siege of the prestigious shopping mall that left close to 70 people dead and more than 60 still missing. AFP PHOTO/Tony KARUMBA

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Kenya on Sunday asked the U.S. government to lift an advisory warning U.S. citizens over travel to the east African country after the Sept. 21 Nairobi mall attack, calling it "unnecessary" and "unfriendly".

Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku delivered the sharp diplomatic rebuke to Washington when he updated reporters on a government investigation eight days after the assault by Islamist militants on the upmarket Westgate mall in the Kenyan capital.

Although Kenyan police assisted by U.S., Israeli and European experts are still poring over the partially wrecked building, Ole Lenku said the death toll from the attack still stood at 67. Five attackers were also killed.

Nine suspects were in custody over the raid, one of them arrested on Sunday, he added. The minister declined to give any information about the suspected attackers or those arrested, saying "we do not discuss intelligence matters in public".

Ole Lenku expressed strong objections to an updated travel advisory issued by the U.S. government to its citizens urging them to "evaluate their personal security situation in light of continuing and recently heightened threats from terrorism" in the east African country.